Pakistan The Unabated Killings of the Hazaras♦ Tilak Devasher* If there ever was a sign of the demise of the Pakistani state it is the killing of the Hazara community of Quetta1 The persecution of minorities in Pakistan in recent decades has been systematic, sustained and continuous. Even among the minorities, “The targeting of the Shia Hazaras2 of Balochistan is one of the most violent and persistent persecution (sic) of any community in Pakistan on account of religious beliefs.”3 Not surprisingly many have termed it ‘ethnic cleansing’ while the BBC in 2013 had termed Quetta “hell on earth” and that ♦ Portions of the article have been excerpted from the author’s forthcoming book on the region. * Tilak Devasher is the author of ‘Pakistan: Courting the Abyss’ published by Harper Collins India. He is a former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, Government of India. He is currently Consultant, The Pakistan Project, Vivekananda International Foundation, New Delhi. 1 Khaled Ahmed, Sleepwalking To Surrender: Dealing With Terrorism In Pakistan, Penguin Random House, Gurgaon, 2016, p. 273. 2 Though not all Hazaras are Shias the majority are. 3 Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), 2013, Balochistan: Giving the People a chance: Report of a Fact-Finding Mission, June 2013, http:// www.hrcp-web.org/hrcpweb/wp-content/pdf/Balochistan%20Report%20 New%20Final.pdf (accessed May 15, 2018). Tilak Devasher ‘Quetta’s Hazara community is on the front line of Pakistan’s battle with violent extremism.’4 Since 2002, close to 3,000 Shias have been killed, most of them belonging to the Hazara community.5 A popular, though macabre, saying in Quetta is that a Hazara is born in Afghanistan, grows up in Pakistan and is buried in Iran.6 The wanton killings have come to such a pass that the pro-active Chief Justice of Pakistan, Mian Saqib Nisar, was compelled to observe, on April 10, 2018 that his “head hangs in shame due to targeted killings of the Hazara Shia community.”7 A month later he termed the attacks “ethnic cleansing”8 adding that, in his opinion, the Hazara killings were “equivalent to wiping out an entire generation.”9 The systematic targeting of the Hazaras has been compounded by the inability or unwillingness of the state to prevent further attacks or prosecute the perpetrators who openly proclaim their involvement. 4 Mobeen Azhar, ‘Hell on Earth: Inside Quetta’s Hazara community’, BBC World Service, May 1, 2013, http://www.bbc.com/news/world- asia-22248500 (accessed May 15, 2018). 5 Mushtaq Rajpar, ‘No end in sight’, The News, October 19, 2017, https:// www.thenews.com.pk/print/238136-No-end-in-sight (accessed May 15, 2018). 6 Farid Kasi, ‘Feeding the forces of Extremism,’ Newsline, February 2014, http://newslinemagazine.com/magazine/feeding-the-forces-of-extremism/ (accessed May 15, 2018). 7 ‘CJP says ‘head hangs in shame’ over Hazara Shia killings’, Pakistan Today, April 10, 2018, https://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2018/04/10/ cjp-says-head-hangs-in-shame-over-hazara-shia-killings/ (accessed May 15, 2018). 8 Muhammad Zafar, ‘CJP calls killing of Hazaras ‘ethnic cleansing’, The Express Tribune, May 11, 2018, https://tribune.com.pk/story/1707695/1- hazara-killings-tantamount-ethnic-cleansing-cjp/ (accessed May 15, 2018). 9 Syed Ali Shah, ‘Hazara killings tantamount to wiping out an entire generation, says chief justice’, Dawn, May 11, 2018, https://www.dawn. com/news/1407011 (accessed May 15, 2018). 2 Pakistan: The Unabated Killings of the Hazaras The targeting of the Hazaras is not an isolated process. It forms part of the larger problem of the targeting of Pakistan’s Shia community, which constitutes about 20 per cent of the country’s overwhelmingly Muslim population. The Hazaras in Balochistan, numbering about half a million, have been particularly vulnerable to targeted attacks due to their distinctive facial features and Shia religious affiliation. Despite being forced to live in virtual ghettos in Quetta, they continue to suffer the same fate while going to/returning from pilgrimages to Iran, or while going about their daily lives. According to the Human Rights Watch (HRW), “There is no travel route, no shopping trip, no school run, no work commute that is safe.”10 Recognising this, the then UN Secretary-General Ban Ki- moon in a statement on October 23, 2016, urged the Pakistan Government to bring to justice the perpetrators of the preceding terrorist attacks on Shia Muslims, which killed over 40 people, including several children. The attacks had been carried out by the banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ).11 WHO ARE THE HAZARAS? There are at least three theories about the origins of the Persian-speaking Hazaras.12 According to scholars like Armenius Vambery,13 Mountstuart Elphinston,14 Alexander Burns15 and H.W. Bellew,16 the 10 Human Rights Watch, ‘We are the Walking Dead: Killings of Shia Hazaras in Balochistan, Pakistan.’ June 2014, https://www.hrw.org/sites/default/ files/reports/pakistan0614_ForUplaod.pdf (accessedMay 15, 2018). 11 Malik Siraj Akbar, ‘Who Is Killing Pakistan’s Shias?’ Huffington Post, October 26, 2016, https://www.huffingtonpost.com/malik-siraj-akbar/who- is-killing-pakistans_b_8396140.html (accessed May 15, 2018). 12 They should not be confused with the Hindko-speaking largely Sunni Hazaras (Hazarewal) of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK). 13 John Murray, Travel in Central Asia, 1864, London. 14 The Kingdom of Kabul, 1978, Nisa Traders, Quetta. 15 John Murray, Travels into Bokhara, 1839, London. 16 Thacker, The Races of Afghanistan, 1880, Spink & Co, Calcutta. 3 Tilak Devasher Hazaras are the descendants of Mongol soldiers who came to Afghanistan with Changez Khan’s army in the 13th century. According to Bellew, Mongol soldiers were, …planted here [central Afghanistan] in detachments of a thousand fighting men by Changez Khan in the first quarter of the thirteenth century. It is said that Changez Khan left ten such detachments here, nine in the Hazarah of Kabul and the tenth in the Hazarah of Pakli [Pakhlai] to the east of the Indus.17 According to this version, the word Hazara is the Farsi equivalent of the Mongol word ming or mingan, meaning a thousand. The Mongols divided their troops into groups of ten: dah, hundred: sad, and thousand: hazar. According to Olaf Caroe, Changez Khan left Afghanistan in 1222, after having decimated large parts of it. On his death bed in 1227, he bequeathed the Afghan provinces to his second son Chaghatai. Chaghatai and his successors did not make any efforts to occupy or administer these Afghan provinces. What he left were military colonists in central Afghanistan. These Mongol colonists came to be known as Hazaras, derived from the Persian hazar for one thousand.18 Most western scholars and specialists on Afghanistan, such as E.F. Fox, W.K. Fraser-Tytler, E.E. Bacon, W. Thesiger and G.K. Dulling and certain Afghan scholars like Sayed Jamaluddin Al-Afghani have accepted the theory of the Hazaras as descendants of the Mongols.19 17 Sayed Askar Mousavi, The Hazaras Of Afghanistan: An Historical, Cultural, Economic And Political Study, 1998, Curzon Press, Surrey, p.24- 25. 18 Olaf Caroe, The Pathans, 1958, OUP, Oxford. This edition is OUP, Karachi, 2009, pp.135-36. 19 Sayed Askar Mousavi, Op cit. p.26. 4 Pakistan: The Unabated Killings of the Hazaras A variation of this theory as developed by H.F. Schurmann,20 is that the Hazaras are not the descendants of the Mongols alone; rather they represent a mixture of races – Mongols, Turks, Tajik, Afghan, etc. According to this theory, the Hazaras emerged between the 13th and 15th centuries as a mixed people from the integration of several races and cultures. According to M.H. Kakar,21 the Mongol soldiers who entered Afghanistan were either unmarried or did not have their wives with them; they married Tajik women of the central and neighbouring regions of Afghanistan. Inter-marriage with the Tajiks, who were of Iranian origin and spoke Farsi, influenced the language of these newcomers and laid the foundation for the new Farsi dialect known as Hazaragi.22 A third theory, as developed by French scholar J.P. Ferrier,23 is that the Hazaras have inhabited Afghanistan since the time of Alexander. As proof of his theory, he quotes battle accounts by the Greek historian Quintus Curtius, of the excursions of Alexander into central Afghanistan. Ferrier seeks to establish that the people mentioned in these battle accounts were in fact the forefathers of the people currently known as the Hazaras.24 According to Afghan scholar Abdul Hay Habibi, the existence of the name Hazara in ancient Chinese and Greek works discredits claims that the name is of Mongol origin coined at the time of Changez Khan. Habibi maintains that hazara is an ancient Aryan word, meaning ‘pure-hearted’ and ‘generous’, and not in this case hazar (or thousand), the Farsi 20 The Mongols of Afghanistan, 1962, University of California. 21 Afghanistan: A Study in International Political Development: 1880-1896, 1971, Punjab Educational Press, Lahore. 22 Sayed Askar Mousavi, Op cit., p.29-30. 23 John Murray, Caravan Journeys and Wanderings in Persia, Afghanistan, Turkistan and Baluchistan, 1857, London. 24 Ibid, pp. 21-22. 5 Tilak Devasher translation of the Mongoli ming.25 Subscribers to this idea point to the similar facial structure of the Hazaras with those of Buddhist murals and statues in the region.26 Firdousi also mentions the fiercely resistant warriors of Babaristan which can be identified as Hazarajat or the central province of Bamyan. Famous Chinese traveller Hiuen Tsang passed through central Afghanistan in 644 and mentioned two capitals, Ho-See-Na (Ghazni) and Ho-See-La (Hazara) in Archosia (Afghanistan).27 Anthropologists and historians will no doubt continue to discuss the merits of each theory endlessly, but for our purposes suffice to say that the Hazaras were settled in central Afghanistan.
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